International Public Sector Fraud Forum guidance
Guidance on countering fraud against the public sector from the International Public Sector Fraud Forum.
- From:
- Public Sector Fraud Authority
- Published
- 10 February 2020
- Last updated
-
128NovemberFebruary20242025 — See all updates
Documents
Fraud Control Testing Framework FCTF-01 (PDF)
PDF, 3.84 MB, 48 pages
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Fraud in International Aid Principles for Effective Fraud Control (PDF)
PDF, 2.88 MB, 36 pages
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A Guide to Pressure Testing (PDF)
PDF, 9.52 MB, 17 pages
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International Public Sector Fraud Forum: A guide to managing fraud for public bodies
PDF, 2.04 MB, 24 pages
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Fraud in emergency management and recovery: principles for effective fraud control
PDF, 6.8 MB, 28 pages
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Guide to designing counter fraud and corruption awareness training for public bodies
PDF, 6.45 MB, 52 pages
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Guide to understanding the total impact of fraud
PDF, 2.47 MB, 48 pages
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The use of artificial intelligence to combat public sector fraud
PDF, 6.12 MB, 40 pages
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Fraud Loss Measurement Framework (PDF)
PDF, 2.64 MB, 66 pages
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Details
International collaboration
The International Public Sector Fraud Forum (IPSFF) brings together experts working to combat public sector fraud from across the Five Eyes intelligence alliance (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and United States). It is chaired by representatives from the United Kingdom.
The collective aim of the Forum is to come together to share best and leading practice in fraud management and control across public borders.
The Forum is underpinned by five principles for combatting public sector fraud:
- There is always going to be fraud: It is a fact that some individuals will look to make gains where there is opportunity, and organisations need robust processes in place to prevent, detect and respond to fraud and corruption.
- Finding fraud is a good thing: If you don’t find fraud you can’t fight it. This requires a change in perspective so the identification of fraud is viewed as a positive and proactive achievement.
- There is no one solution: Addressing fraud needs a holistic response incorporating detection, prevention and redress, underpinned by a strong understanding of risk. It also requires cooperation between organisations under a spirit of collaboration.
- Fraud and corruption are ever changing: Fraud, and counter fraud practices, evolve very quickly and organisations must be agile and change their approach to deal with these evolutions
- Prevention is the most effective way to address fraud and corruption: Preventing fraud through effective counter fraud practices reduces loss and reputational damage. It also requires less resources than an approach focused on detection and recovery.
Details
International collaboration
The International Public Sector Fraud Forum (IPSFF) brings together experts working to combat public sector fraud from across the Five Eyes intelligence alliance (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and United States). It is chaired by representatives from the United Kingdom.
The collective aim of the Forum is to come together to share best and leading practice in fraud management and control across public borders.
The Forum is underpinned by five principles for combatting public sector fraud:
- There is always going to be fraud: It is a fact that some individuals will look to make gains where there is opportunity, and organisations need robust processes in place to prevent, detect and respond to fraud and corruption.
- Finding fraud is a good thing: If you don’t find fraud you can’t fight it. This requires a change in perspective so the identification of fraud is viewed as a positive and proactive achievement.
- There is no one solution: Addressing fraud needs a holistic response incorporating detection, prevention and redress, underpinned by a strong understanding of risk. It also requires cooperation between organisations under a spirit of collaboration.
- Fraud and corruption are ever changing: Fraud, and counter fraud practices, evolve very quickly and organisations must be agile and change their approach to deal with these evolutions
- Prevention is the most effective way to address fraud and corruption: Preventing fraud through effective counter fraud practices reduces loss and reputational damage. It also requires less resources than an approach focused on detection and recovery.
Updates to this page
Last updated
-
Added the document: Fraud Loss Measurement Framework
-
Updated details text
-
Added the document: Fraud Control Testing Framework FCTF-01
-
Added document: A guide to pressure testing
-
Added the documents: Fraud in International Aid Principles for Effective Fraud Control International Public Sector Fraud Forum: A guide to managing fraud for public bodies
-
First published.
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Update history
2026-06-15 15:54
Added a link to the page: Fraud Prevention Savings Framework
2025-02-28 12:00
Added the document: Fraud Loss Measurement Framework
2024-11-01 09:18
Updated details text
2023-09-29 12:00
Added the document: Fraud Control Testing Framework FCTF-01
2022-11-09 16:13
Added document: A guide to pressure testing
2022-11-09 09:00
Added the documents: Fraud in International Aid Principles for Effective Fraud ControlInternational Public Sector Fraud Forum: A guide to managing fraud for public bodies